Difference between revisions of "Tentative List"

From pwgwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 11: Line 11:
  
 
==  JLEIC ==
 
==  JLEIC ==
*C. Riedl    - DVCS@HERMES with electrons and positrons
+
*C. Riedl    - DVCS@HERMES with electrons and positrons
 
*A. Ferrero  - DVCS with charge/spin asymmetries at COMPASS
 
*A. Ferrero  - DVCS with charge/spin asymmetries at COMPASS
 
*J. Wagner  - Inclusion of heavy quark flavors in DVCS and evaluation of impact in the context of an EIC
 
*J. Wagner  - Inclusion of heavy quark flavors in DVCS and evaluation of impact in the context of an EIC

Revision as of 15:40, 22 March 2017

Introductory Talks

  • Organizer welcome and charge
  • Lab or scientific director welcome

General

  • H. Moutarde - Specific constraints using positrons and electrons for DVCS
  • K. Kumericki (K. Passek-Kumericki) / H. Moutarde - DVCS asymmetries
  • M. Vanderhaeghen - Two photon exchange

CEBAF 12 GeV

JLEIC

  • C. Riedl - DVCS@HERMES with electrons and positrons
  • A. Ferrero - DVCS with charge/spin asymmetries at COMPASS
  • J. Wagner - Inclusion of heavy quark flavors in DVCS and evaluation of impact in the context of an EIC
  • H. Spiesberger (F. Ringer) - electroweak DIS (charged currents, neutral currents) for access to unpolarised and polarised PDFs

Electroweak structure of hadrons

  • "Structure functions with e+ and e- DIS at HERA" (Amanda Cooper-Sarkar/Voica Radescu)
  • "What can we learn about PDFs from future e+/e- DIS?" (Sven Moch)
  • "Probing strangeness via charm production in CC DIS" (Matthew Wing/Olaf Behnke)
  • "Charm production in diffractive CC DIS" ?? (Christophe Royon)
  • "Pion and kaon structure from tagged DIS" (Tanja Horn)
  • "Flavor dependence of nuclear structure functions" (Nestor Armrest)
  • "Spin structure (SIDIS?) with positron beams" (Alessandro Bacchetta/Werner Vogelsang/Marc Schlegel/Piet Mulders)
  • "Detector requirements for CC physics" (Jose Repond)
  • "LHC ??? (What can e+/e- do for Higgs?) "
  • "Positrons at LHeC " ???

Low Energy Positrons

Farida's List

  • Christoph Hugenschmidt, Technical University of Munich, He developed the most intense positron beam in the world.
  • Atsuo Kawasuso, JAEA Takasaki Institute, Applications for polarized positrons
  • Andreas Wagner, Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, Dresden, Accelerator based positron beams
  • Alex Weiss, University of Texas Arlington, Low energy positrons
  • David Gidley, University of Michigan, Professor Emeritus, He was the first to initiate polarized positrons technique for magnetism study.
  • Toshio Kyodo, KEK in Japan, Positron diffraction
  • Yasuyuki Nagashima, University of Tokyo, Development and applications of positron

Branislav's suggestions...

  • Northeastern University: Arun Bansil ar.bansil@neu.edu and
  • Bernardo Barbiellini B.Amidei@neu.edu
  • University of Missouri-Kansas, City Jerry Jean, jeany@umkc.edu
  • University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, David Gidley gidley@umich.edu
  • University of California at San Diego, Cliff Surko csurko@physics.ucsd.edu
  • Wayne State University, Talbert Stein stein@physics.wayne.edu
  • University of Texas at Arlington, Alexander H. Weiss weiss@uta.edu
  • First Point Scientific Inc, Roderick Greaves of greaves@firstpsi.com
  • Washington State University, Kelvin Lynn kgl@wsu.edu
  • University of California at Riverside, Allen Mills allen.mills@ucr.edu
  • North Carolina State University, Ayman Hawari ayman.hawari@ncsu.edu
  • University College London, Gaetana Laricchia g.laricchia@ucl.ac.uk
  • CEA/SACLAY, Patrice Perez patrice.perez@cea.fr

Source & Accelerator